Home 9 Highlands NC and Cashiers NC 9 Heaven’s Backyard on the Bartram

Heaven’s Backyard on the Bartram

The Trail Less Traveled offers a wealth of earthly delights.
highlands nc rabun bald

Written by: Emily Crowell

Today – unseasonably warm and sunny when it was forecast to be cloudy and cold – my sweetheart and I were heading up to Rabun Bald, a first for both of us.  It’s one of the more popular hiking spots in the region, but I didn’t think it would be too crowded this early in the season.

Was I ever wrong.  The parking area was so crammed with cars we couldn’t find a spot.  Solitude was on our agenda, and we didn’t turn around and drive away – we fled. 

We were heading back down Hale Ridge Road when the car skidded to a stop in front of the Bartram Trail.  Here was a section of trail we’d never been on with no cars or people in sight. Sold.

When I was a kid growing up in the woods, I was confined to playing within sight or earshot of our house, so I got to know my home patch of the planet well.  My inner child still wants to do that some days – spend a lot of time exploring a small area, looking under rocks, searching for treasures under leaves, crouching near a stream, waiting patiently to see what darts through the water.

We didn’t hike very far, maybe a mile in, and took a long time to do it, but we made friends with a new patch of the planet.  I hugged a tree next to a singing creek. We spotted a tiny orange mushroom amongst the lush moss so thoroughly covering a rock that no gray showed through. On the way out, we said a brief “hello” to a garter snake basking on the sunlit trail.  We ventured off-trail to follow a small stream up toward the top of the ridge until the terrain became too steep to continue.  I paused for a moment at the spot where I turned around, sitting, breathing in the joy of a warm sunny day, gazing at the mountains in the distance that will be obscured by leaves shortly after this article is published. 

Despite obviously being a trail-less-traveled, this stretch is well-maintained thanks to dedicated volunteers of the Bartram Trail Society.  Along the way are exposed trunks of trees that have been cut away after falling across the trail, and I found myself in constant genuflection before these fallen trees, in awe of the abundant life growing on these supposedly dead beings. 

Lately, I haven’t been drawn to the big views or the spectacular waterfalls – maybe I’ve grown tired of the crowds around them, or perhaps I’m a little weary of the overwhelming emotions associated with being witness to grandeur.  I’m compelled to get to know the ordinary patches of planet that I look at every day but rarely take the time to see.  Wonder abounds.

Hale Ridge Road is in Scaly Mountain, a little over seven miles from Highlands down NC-106 East on the left.  The Bartram Trail is a few miles down on the left after the road turns to dirt.

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